The bagpipe chanter is every piper’s musical voice. Whether mouth-blown or bellows-blown. Whether the pipes are Highland, Small, Reel-Border-Lowland, Uilleann, Northumberland, Galician — or so many others — our bagpipe chanter is our instruments’ voice. And, as musicians – the bagpipe chanter is Our Voice. It Speaks — to us, to our audience, to the music we play. To the rest of our instrument, and to our purpose.

Our Rain!

The other “sticks” of our instruments matter greatly — and support our bagpipe chanter’s voice. The best set up chanter/reed combinations can’t be heard without full-on, well maintained support by the rest of our instrument.

The reeds in all of these are so Darn important. Origin – selection – manipulation – efficiency. All of which comes down to… Desire! Meaty, gut wrenching, full throated – do anything to get a sound. Anything.

Pipers, with the modicum of power I have – you’re henceforth given permission. Do Anything to get a sound. More precisely: do anything to get Your Sound. It’s all about you, what you hear in your head. This, all of this, reflects you. We all know – we play better if we sound better.

Pipers, I know you know this. It’s crossed your minds – can I, should I, go to great lengths to get a sound? Yes, yes and YES. I’ve sat with pipers, the world acclaimed folks that we all look up to. They will work on instruments after dinner until… whenever (multiple nights is common).

Our desire is there, but it’s best to plan ahead for practical matters.

We need a block of time;

Space to hear yourself think;

A large table and good lighting.

Help from Others

Bagpipe Chanter with large silver sole (soul?) halos the bottom, next to David Glen drones, 1890.

Whether we’re shy on skills or heavy on experience — it’s wonderful and simply terrific to get another’s take on all this. Bagpipe chanter, drones, reeds, tools, more reeds, blowpipes/bellows, position, posture, bags — all of it. We best succeed by reaching out. [For example, the Mastery of Scottish Arts Winter School — I’ve attended about 20 years, and helped to found it back in 1995 — www.CelticArts.org.]

Create an instrument you get to know as you moving forward. Knowing your instrument is a great thing!